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On Fri, 10 Apr 2009 21:29:01 GMT, "Tom Littleton" wrote:
wrote in message .. . Will those things lacking matter in some dramatic fashion? Impossible to say as it can only be commented upon after the fact. overall, I see a very human leadership, warts and all, that seems to be doing an extremely competent, workmanlike job of plowing through a host of problems(most brought on by gross incompetence of others, dating back years). Like I said, something is happening here, and it goes far beyond the Administration, to the renewed focus of a larger part of the electorate on the common good. A changed notion, if you will, of the role of the public in government, and role of government in the functioning of society. Probably, this is merely a pendulum-swing type of reaction to the Conservative swing of the past several decades. But, focusing on minor issues with the President's administration, while overlooking the ability to put some competent folks into key roles, and value intelligent input, seems to be an odd choice.Given the potential of Obama to tap into, for good purposes, that new spirit and focus of the electorate, IMO, you could ponder more important matters, without losing much sleep over the competence of the Obama team. As they say, though, YMMV. Tom Here's how I see it - I think most agreed that Obama could not possibly live up to the ridiculous, unrealistic "hype" during the election cycle and immediately afterward. So the fact that he didn't means little. Likewise, a fair portion of the nonsense, ala "Beancounter" and his not being a US citizen, his being some secret Muslim "terrorist," etc., was and is preposterous and ridiculous. He did and does have fantastic potential, both personally and to tap into "the public potential." But when he does things like nominate and champion Hillary Clinton, Tim Geithner, and worse, Daschle, he demonstrates a lack of both common sense and political savvy, not to mention "smarts." And then, he does plain ol' amateurish **** like bowing to Abdullah, _with footage of it_, and then, allowing/having his people make up **** about shaking hands with Shorty, or having Jarrett hire Kumar as PL to Asian-Americans and the Arts and having his people defend it by citing Kalpen's "International Security" college work, which consisted of a coupla-few online classes, and now, as Ken posted, this dog stuff. And then, the "surrogates" defend all of this amateur-hour shtick by, yet again, going to the "OH, YEAH?! Well, BUSH BUSH BUSH CHENEY CHENEY CHENEY!!!!" defense. Of course, none of the small stuff matters _as isolated incidents_, but when viewed as a total, it's not promising. Look, if was and ran as some "plain ol' guy" with good ideas, it would mitigate this stuff, but he didn't - he ran as the super-sharp man with the plan. Combine all this with the more serious "violations of trust" in all but ignoring key campaign _promises_ (and thus placing them in the realm of typical "business as usual" campaign "promises") such as "no lobbyists," "out of Iraq in 09," etc., etc. (which themselves were amateurish campaign promises that even his one-time Dem rivals called as such), and I believe the criticism is warranted. Can he pull up and out of it? Sure, and I hope he does. But he better pull back on the stick pretty quickly or he's gonna hit a pretty big hill... HTH, R |
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